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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant

PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station with 2 Bottles Review (2026)

Is the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station the right point-of-hazard eyewash for your shop?

Short answer: Yes โ€” for the supplemental tier. The PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station puts 32 ounces of sterile eye wash in two bottles on the wall, signed and visible, exactly where a splash or dust hit happens. It's the best-organized bottle station in our eyewash lineup. But it is a supplemental unit: where your hazard assessment requires ANSI Z358.1 primary eyewash, it supports โ€” it does not replace โ€” a plumbed fixture or a self-contained 15-minute-capable unit like the Magula 9-gallon gravity-fed station.

Bottle stations solve a real problem: sterile eye wash is only useful if the injured worker can find it in seconds with one eye shut. A mounted, labeled station beats a bottle in a drawer every time. This review covers what the double-bottle PhysiciansCare format does well, where it hits the hard ceiling every bottle station shares, and how it stacks up against the other five units in our first aid category โ€” including the budget CGOLDENWALL kit and the mirror-equipped MAASTERS station.

Editorial verdict: 4.5 / 5. The PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station is the strongest supplemental eyewash in our lineup โ€” a recognizable brand, a double-bottle 32-ounce capacity, and a mounting format that makes eye wash visible and auditable at the hazard point. Score it down only for what no bottle station can do: sustained 15-minute primary flushing.

As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are subject to change. Full affiliate disclosure.

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Pros

  • 32 ounces across two bottles โ€” double the flush volume of a single-bottle setup
  • Wall-mounted visibility โ€” signed station at the hazard point, findable with one eye closed
  • Established first aid brand โ€” PhysiciansCare refill bottles are easy to source on a schedule
  • Audit-friendly โ€” a fixed station makes monthly inspection a ten-second check
  • No plumbing, no water changes โ€” sealed sterile bottles, unlike tank stations

Cons

  • Supplemental class only โ€” cannot satisfy an ANSI Z358.1 primary eyewash requirement
  • 32 ounces is still finite โ€” minutes of flushing at best, not fifteen
  • Bottles expire โ€” the station is only compliant-ready if the refill calendar is owned
  • Pricier than bare bottles โ€” you're paying for the bracket, signage, and format

Who the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station is for

  • Shops, kitchens, and labs that want sterile eye wash mounted at the hazard point rather than buried in a first aid cabinet
  • Facilities with plumbed or gravity-fed primary eyewash that need supplemental stations closer to individual benches
  • Safety managers standardizing on one refill bottle across kits and stations โ€” the matching PhysiciansCare Sterile Eye Wash Solution
  • Low-to-moderate splash-risk areas where the hazard assessment doesn't trigger a primary eyewash but eye irritants exist
  • Programs building out the workplace first aid wall: kit, eyewash, signage, all in one place

What the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station does well

Two bottles is the right supplemental format

The 32-ounce, double-bottle configuration is the meaningful upgrade over a loose bottle: more volume on hand, and a second sealed bottle ready the moment the first runs dry. In practice that means a longer initial flush before the injured worker transitions to primary equipment or medical care. It's still a supplemental flush โ€” the honest framing this review keeps returning to โ€” but within the bottle-station class, more sealed volume mounted at eye level is simply better.

Mounting is the feature, not an accessory

Emergencies punish clutter. A wall-mounted station with recognizable eyewash signage means the response starts in seconds โ€” no rummaging, no asking. The station format also survives audits better than loose bottles: an inspector (or your own monthly walk-through) sees at a glance that the station is present, stocked, sealed, and in date. That inspection-friendliness is a quiet but real compliance asset, the same logic that makes wall-mounted first aid cabinets the workplace standard.

The refill ecosystem is painless

PhysiciansCare is an established first aid brand, and this station's consumable is the same PhysiciansCare sterile eye wash bottle we stock and review separately. One SKU refills your kits, benches, and this station โ€” a small logistics win that keeps the replacement cycle actually happening. Slot refills into the same order as your first aid kit refills.

Zero infrastructure, zero maintenance burden

Unlike gravity-fed tank stations, there is no water to change, no preservative additive to dose, and no 60-plus pounds of filled tank on the wall. Mount the bracket, insert sealed bottles, done. For facilities that need supplemental coverage at many points, that near-zero maintenance profile is what makes broad deployment realistic.

Where the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station falls short

The supplemental ceiling

ANSI Z358.1 primary eyewash equipment is defined around a sustained 15-minute flush at specified flow โ€” territory no bottle station enters. If corrosive materials are in use and no plumbed eyewash is within reach, the requirement points you to a self-contained unit like the Frifreego 8-gallon station, with this station as the fast-response supplement beside it. Our ANSI Z358.1 explainer is the regulatory home for the full breakdown.

Expiration is the hidden workload

A station on the wall looks permanently ready, but the bottles inside carry expiration dates. The failure mode of every bottle station is the one nobody re-stocked โ€” sealed bottles quietly out of date. Put it on the monthly inspection list next to your kit checks; the matching refill bottle makes the fix trivial, but the calendar has to exist.

Format premium over bare bottles

At around $46 you're paying roughly double the cost of the bottles alone for bracket, signage, and station format. We think the visibility is worth it at genuine hazard points; for low-risk corners, a bare sterile bottle in the kit may be all the coverage the assessment calls for.

How it compares: the WC Safety eyewash lineup

Product Class Typical price Best for
PhysiciansCare Wall-Mount Station Supplemental wall station, 32 oz ~$46 Point-of-hazard double bottles
PhysiciansCare Eye Wash Solution Personal bottle / refill ~$12 Kit stocking, station refills
CGOLDENWALL Portable Kit Supplemental wall station ~$27 Budget lab/shop mounting
MAASTERS BPA-Free Station Supplemental wall station ~$30 Dual bottles with aiming mirror
Frifreego 8-Gallon Station Self-contained gravity-fed ~$125 Remote areas without plumbing
Magula 9-Gallon Station Self-contained gravity-fed ~$126 Temporary and remote sites

Rankings and tier-by-tier picks are in the best portable eyewash stations guide.

Within the bottle-station tier: PhysiciansCare vs CGOLDENWALL vs MAASTERS

Spec PhysiciansCare CGOLDENWALL MAASTERS
Wall-mounted โœ“ โœ“ โœ“
Dual bottles โœ“ โ€” โœ“
Stated 32 oz sterile capacity โœ“ โ€” โ€”
Aiming mirror โ€” โ€” โœ“
Typical price ~$46 ~$27 ~$30
  • Buy the PhysiciansCare if you want the established-brand refill chain and the stated 32-ounce sterile capacity โ€” the safest default for workplace walls.
  • Buy the CGOLDENWALL kit if budget rules and you're covering many low-risk points โ€” see our CGOLDENWALL review.
  • Buy the MAASTERS station if the aiming mirror and BPA-free bottles matter to your users โ€” full notes in the MAASTERS review.

Shop bottle stations on Amazon โ†’ PhysiciansCare Station CGOLDENWALL Kit MAASTERS Station

What to pair with it

The station is one layer of an eye-safety program. Prevention comes from the safety glasses collection; the refill chain comes from the PhysiciansCare sterile eye wash bottle; and the primary-flush tier, where required, comes from the Frifreego 8-gallon or Magula 9-gallon gravity-fed units โ€” reviewed in full in the Frifreego review and Magula review. Map the whole program with the first aid kit pillar guide.

Top pairings on Amazon โ†’ PhysiciansCare Refill Bottles Frifreego 8-Gallon

Total cost of ownership

The bracket is a one-time buy; the bottles are the recurring line. Budget two sealed replacement bottles per station per expiration cycle, plus immediate replacement after any use โ€” never re-hang an opened bottle. Compared with a gravity-fed tank station, there's no preservative additive and no water-change labor, so the ongoing cost is genuinely just bottles; compared with plumbed fixtures there's no installation at all. For multi-station deployments, standardizing on one refill SKU across stations and workplace kits keeps the restock order simple.

Final verdict: 4.5 / 5

Within the supplemental tier, the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station is our default recommendation: right volume, right visibility, and the easiest refill chain in the class. Buy it to put sterile flushing seconds away at every genuine hazard point. Buy a gravity-fed self-contained station instead โ€” or as well โ€” where the hazard assessment demands sustained 15-minute primary flushing that no bottle station can offer.

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PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station โ€” FAQ

Is the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station ANSI Z358.1 compliant?

It belongs to the personal/supplemental eyewash class under ANSI Z358.1 โ€” legitimate as a supplement, but not a substitute for plumbed or self-contained primary equipment where the standard requires a sustained 15-minute flush. The ANSI Z358.1 explainer covers exactly when each tier is required.

How much eye wash does the PhysiciansCare wall station hold?

The station holds two bottles totaling 32 ounces of sterile eye wash, per the listing. That supports a longer initial flush than a single personal bottle, with a second sealed bottle ready when the first empties โ€” but it remains minutes of supplemental flushing, not a 15-minute primary flush.

PhysiciansCare wall station vs Frifreego 8-gallon โ€” which do I need?

Different tiers, different jobs. If corrosive materials are in use with no plumbed eyewash nearby, the Frifreego 8-gallon self-contained station answers the primary requirement; the wall station is the fast supplemental layer beside it. If your assessment doesn't trigger a primary unit, the wall station alone covers the irritant-level risk. See the Frifreego review for the tank tier.

What refill bottles does the PhysiciansCare station take?

The natural restock is the PhysiciansCare Sterile Eye Wash Solution from the same brand โ€” verify bottle size against your bracket before bulk ordering. Keeping one refill SKU across stations and kits is the easiest way to make the replacement cycle stick.

Where should the wall station be mounted?

At the point of hazard, at eye-accessible height, unobstructed and signed โ€” a splashed worker navigates by memory with eyes clamped shut. Mount it along the natural travel path from the hazard, and keep the area in front of it clear the same way you would a first aid cabinet.

Do the bottles in the station expire?

Yes โ€” sterile eye wash bottles carry printed expiration dates, and an in-date station is the whole point of mounting one. Add the station to your monthly first aid inspection: present, sealed, in date, unobstructed. Replacement bottles are inexpensive; findings and injuries are not.

Is the PhysiciansCare station enough for a battery charging area?

Battery electrolyte is corrosive, which typically triggers the quick-drenching requirement of OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c) โ€” that points to primary eyewash equipment, with bottle stations as supplements only. Read our OSHA first aid requirements reference and confirm against your own hazard assessment.

PhysiciansCare vs MAASTERS bottle station โ€” which to buy?

The PhysiciansCare offers the stated 32-ounce sterile capacity and the strongest refill chain; the MAASTERS station counters with BPA-free bottles and an aiming mirror at a lower price. For workplace walls we default to PhysiciansCare; the MAASTERS review makes the counter-case.

Can the wall station handle chemical splash emergencies?

It can start the flush โ€” which genuinely matters โ€” but chemical exposures demand prolonged irrigation and medical follow-up. Use the station as the immediate response while moving to primary equipment, and check the SDS for the specific chemical's first aid direction. This two-stage role is what supplemental stations are for.

Does the station need any plumbing or maintenance?

No plumbing, no water changes, no additives โ€” the maintenance is bottle-date management and a monthly visual check. That's the practical advantage of sealed sterile bottles over gravity-fed tanks like the Magula 9-gallon, which trade maintenance for capacity.

How fast can someone reach the station in an emergency?

That's your mounting decision. ANSI Z358.1's guidance for primary equipment is reachability within seconds of the hazard, and the same logic should drive supplemental placement โ€” mount the station where the work happens, not where the wall happens to be empty. One station per hazard cluster beats one per building.

Should every workplace first aid wall include an eyewash station?

If eye irritants exist on site โ€” dusts, cleaning chemicals, particles โ€” a supplemental station is a cheap, visible upgrade to the standard kit-plus-cabinet wall. Pair it with a stocked kit from the workplace first aid kits collection; our first aid pillar guide covers the full wall layout.

What eye protection should be used alongside the station?

The station is the response; sealed or wraparound eyewear from the safety glasses collection is the prevention. Sites that mount eyewash but skip compliant eyewear are treating symptoms โ€” run both, and the station mostly gathers dust, which is the goal.

Is the PhysiciansCare station OSHA-approved?

OSHA doesn't "approve" eyewash products; it requires suitable flushing facilities where hazards demand them, and ANSI Z358.1 defines the equipment classes. This station is positioned for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a supplemental unit โ€” the compliance question is always whether your facility's primary coverage exists where required.

How does this station compare to the CGOLDENWALL portable kit?

The CGOLDENWALL kit undercuts it by about $20 and covers the same supplemental role, but with a thinner brand and documentation trail. Standardize on PhysiciansCare where audits matter; use CGOLDENWALL to stretch coverage across many low-risk points โ€” details in the CGOLDENWALL review.

Where do I find rankings of all portable eyewash options?

Our best portable eyewash stations guide ranks every unit we stock across the bottle and gravity-fed tiers, and the PhysiciansCare solution review covers this station's consumable in depth.

Why trust this PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial PPE and first aid retailer โ€” we stock this station, its refill bottles, and the gravity-fed units above it, and we sell to safety managers, procurement teams, and field supervisors. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by PhysiciansCare or paid third-party reviewers. Positioning is mapped against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 equipment-class definitions. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this product and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” First aid and emergency equipment desk ยท specialization: OSHA/ANSI first aid program stocking, emergency eyewash tiers, and workplace kit compliance.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.50, ANSI/ISEA Z358.1-2014, FDA OTC ophthalmic drug labeling requirements, PhysiciansCare product listing documentation.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Capacity figures taken from the product listing โ€” no specifications invented.
How this eyewash station review was researched. We evaluated the PhysiciansCare Wall-Mountable Eyewash Station as a buyer's-guide analysis: listed capacity and format were mapped against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 supplemental-vs-primary equipment classes, OSHA 1926.50, and FDA OTC labeling conventions, then compared against the five other units in our eyewash lineup. No first-person product testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to OSHA or ANSI/ISEA guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program; outbound Amazon links on this page carry our affiliate tag and may earn us a commission at no cost to you. WC Safety also stocks this product. The 4.5/5 rating reflects editorial assessment of format, capacity, refill ecosystem, and honest tier limits โ€” no sponsorship or manufacturer input was involved. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice; consult your safety officer or a certified professional for site-specific eyewash requirements.
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